On March 13, we will officially begin rolling out our initiative to require all developers who contribute code on GitHub.com to enable one or more forms of two-factor authentication (2FA) by the end of 2023. Read on to learn about what the process entails and how you can help secure the software supply chain with 2FA.
Oh noes, 2 different authenticators? Between my two jobs I need: Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, Duo, CyberArk, Okta, Impriviata, and I must have LastPass for password management. Everyone demands their particular flavor of security. Not to mention I have to login to all of these 40 something accounts every 29 days so they don’t expire. Please, someone just everyone switch to a password-free security system like Microsoft Authenticator has and let’s just get rid of the song and dance of picking a new password all the time.
You might want to migrate away from LastPass. And change every account password. They were hacked horribly and the only thing standing between your encrypted passwords and hackers is time.
Oh noes, 2 different authenticators? Between my two jobs I need: Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, Duo, CyberArk, Okta, Impriviata, and I must have LastPass for password management. Everyone demands their particular flavor of security. Not to mention I have to login to all of these 40 something accounts every 29 days so they don’t expire. Please, someone just everyone switch to a password-free security system like Microsoft Authenticator has and let’s just get rid of the song and dance of picking a new password all the time.
You might want to migrate away from LastPass. And change every account password. They were hacked horribly and the only thing standing between your encrypted passwords and hackers is time.
Well that and 2FA on everything.